16 App. D.C. 229 | D.C. Cir. | 1900
delivered the opinion of the Court:
The appeal in this case is brought into this court from a judgment of one of the justices of the Supreme Court of this District, sitting in special term, rendered on habeas corpus, whereby the appellee was discharged from imprisonment, to which he had been committed in execution of a sentence of the police court of this District.
By the information upon which the appellee was tried and convicted, a copy of which is filed with the petition for the writ of habeas corpus, the appellee was charged in the police court, with being, on the 1st day of October, 1899, at and within the District of Columbia, and ever since that date, and still was, at the date of the filing of the information, a suspicious person, in and about the streets, avenues, alleys, roads and highways, to wit, Four-and-a-half street, southwest, contrary to and in violation of the act of Congress entitled “An act to amend an act for the preservation of the public peace and the protection of property in the District of Columbia,” approved July 8, 1898.
By the return of the intendant of the workhouse to the writ of habeas corpus, it is stated, “ that the petitioner, said George Frazier, was convicted in the police court of the District of Columbia on the 24th day of October, .1899, of the charge of being a suspicious character, contrary to and in violation of the act of Congress approved July 8, 1898, entitled ‘an act to amend,’” etc.
By the amendatory act of Congress referred to, approved July 8, 1898, the section 8 of the act of Congress of July 29, 1892, was stricken out, and the following substituted in its place, viz :
“That all vagrants — all idle and disorderly persons — persons of evil life or evil fame — persons who have no visible
The arrest and conviction of the appellee appear to have been upon mere suspicion, and \he is only charged with being a suspicious person, without any relation whatever to crime committed in the past, or crime intended to be committed in the future^ The suspicion of which he is the object is wholly undefined, and in no manner connected with amr criminal act or conduct'either of ,the.past or that might occur in the future. By whom the suspicion is to be entertained does not appear, — whether it be by one policeman or by several, seems not to be regarded as material; or whether it be a suspicion entertained by one or more citizens is by no means certain. It may be conceded that the fair construction of the statute requires that the suspicion must be in reference to some of the species or kinds of vices enumerated in the particular section of the statute, containing the provision upon which the prosecution is founded; but then the question is, with reference to what particular vice or vices of those mentioned in the statute must the suspicion be taken to relate ? General suspicion, without even reference to a propensity or intent to commit some particular crime or offense against the law or police of the Government,must be conceded to be wholly inoperative and without effect, as a definition of crime. Mere suspicion is no evidence of crime of any particular kind, and it forms no element in the constitution of crime. Suspicion may exist without even the knowledge of the party who is the object of the suspicion, as to the matter of which he is suspected. The
In the return of the intendant of the workhouse to the writ of habeas corpus, it is stated, as we have seen, that the prisoner was convicted and sentenced upon a charge of being a suspicious character. This is not .the same thing as a charge of being a suspicious person. The element of character is general reputation as to what the party is supposed to be. Character is in itself such reputation as is generally accredited to the party in the minds of others, for good or evil, based upon his general conduct and habits of life, in relation to those to whom he is best known.
A suspicious character, however, does not constitute crime, nor does it justify the Government in treating the party having such reputation as. a criminal, without connecting him with some criminal act or conduct. But
In the legislation of England, in regard to the police of that kingdom, we find a great variety of regulations prescribed from time to time, dating back to the earlier reigns and all those in succession, down to modern times, to meet the requirements of the then existing states of society. But much of that legislation has become obsolete, and, from its severe restrictions upon the liberties of the people, and the cruel and unnatural punishments inflicted, it has long since ceased to be applicable to modern society, and could not at s^this day be tolerated. The history of.that legislation is clearly stated by Mr. Justice Stephen in the third volume of his history of the Criminal Law of England, Ch. 32, pp. 263-274, and in 2 Broom & Had. Com. 467.
The statutes now7 in force in England, for the arrest and punishment of persons charged with idleness, disorderly conduct and vagrancy, etc., are 5 Geo. IV, Ch. 83, passed in 1824, and the amendatory acts of 1 and 2 Vict., Ch. 38; 31 and 32 Vict., Ch. 52; and 32 and 33 Vict., Ch. 99. The Stat. of 5 Geo. IV, Ch. 83, was a revision of pre-existing statutes upon the subject, and that statute would seem to have furnished a general outline for legislation of the same class in this country. By the fourth section of that statute, among other provisions, it is enacted, “that persons found in or
This statute of George IV, as will be observed, does what our act of Congress fails to do — it requires the suspicion imputed to the party charged to have relation to or connection with certain acts and conduct of the party, and intention to commit crime. Without such relation or connection the party could not be charged and convicted as being a rogue and vagabond. But that statute, with the definitions and limitations to which we have referred, encountered severe opposition and criticism at the time, because it gave arbitrary, dangerous and undefined powers to a single justice, and by the indiscreet and malevolent exercise of which gave rise to the most vexatious imprisonment and subsequent litigation. It was found, says Mr. Chitty (1 Chitty, General Prac. 623), “that, under that act, the mere suspicion of a propensity to commit a trifling offense was punishable, by a single magistrate, with three calendar months’ imprisonment, without the power of obtaining release upon finding the most satisfactory sureties for his good behavior.” The dangerous and arbitrary provisions of that statute have, however, been modified by subsequent'statutes upon the subject. But our act of Congress of July 8, 1898, being more arbitrary than the English statute of George IV, subjects a party
In support of the prosecution and conviction (the case arising as it does upon habeas corpus, and therefore collaterally), it is contended that there was no power or jurisdiction in the' court below to discharge the prisoner from the operation of the judgment and sentence of the police court; that the judgment and sentence of that court are final, and that the discharge of the prisoner from imprisonment in the workhouse, to which he had been committed in execution of judgment, was unwarranted and without the authority of law. This contention is entirely correct upon the assumption that the police court had full power and jurisdiction to take cognizance of the case, and to try and convict the accused, and to enter the judgment and sentence against him that we find stated in the record. It is argued that because the police court has jurisdiction to hear and determine prosecutions for the class of offenses enumerated in the act of Congress, among which this alleged offense is described, that therefore the court had jurisdiction in this particular case against the prisoner to proceed to try and pass judgment against him; and that the finding and judgment of the court must be accepted, in this collateral proceeding on habeas corpus, as final and conclusive; as well upon the question of jurisdiction of the court as upon the question of the guilt of the party. But this proposition, as applied to this particular case, can not be accepted without material qualification. The judgment and sentence of the police court are assailed in this case upon {he ground that the act of Congress, under which the prisoner was convicted and sentenced, is, in respect to the particular offense' charged, unconstitutional, or is so indefinite as to this particular ofense as to be void and without effect. If this position is well taken, it affects the foundation of the whole proceeding. For, as said by the Supreme Court in Ex parte Siebold, 100
And so in the case of In re Coy, 127 U. S. 731, the Supreme Court, by Mr. Justice Miller, said: “As the laws 'of Congress are only valid when they are within the constitutional power of that body, the validity of the statute under which a prisoner is held in custody may be inquired into.under a writ of habeas corpus as affecting the jurisdiction of the court which ordered his imprisonment. And if there be want of power apparent on the face of the record of his condemnation, whether in the indictment or elsewhere, the court which has authority to issue the writ is bound to release him.” And to the same effect is the case of Hans Nielsen, petitioner, 131 U. S. 176. Indeed, many other cases might be cited in which the same doctrine is fully maintained.
We are, of course, sensible of the fact that it is only in cases where legislative power has been clearly transcended in declaring that to be law which is not within legislative competency, that courts are justified in declaring any particular provision of an act of Congress void and without
From what we have said in the preceding part of this opinion, the necessary conclusion is, that the particular provision of the amendatory act of July 8, 1898, declaring that “ all suspicious persons ” could be arrested and prosecuted as criminals, and upon conviction be fined and imprisoned, is nugatory and without effect, and therefore the police court was without jurisdiction to try, convict and sentence to
It follows that the judgment of the court below must be affirmed; and it is so ordered. Judgment affirmed.